State v. Hart
State v. Hart
Opinion of the Court
The opinion of the Court was delivered by
Mr. Justice Woods. The defendant was convicted of housebreaking and petit larceny, the charge being that he broke and entered the cotton seed house of C. P. Hodges and stole cotton seed therefrom. The case contains this agreed statement: “Mr. C. P. Hodges owned a cotton seed house in Marlboro county. About six or eight feet from the ground was an opening through which cotton seed from the wagons was pitched into the house. The doors of the seed house were locked the evening before, and were found locked the following- morning. This opening was about two feet wide and several feet long. This opening was provided with a shutter or blind. There was evidence admitted to the effect that the habit of Mr. Hodges, or the *215 men in his employ, was to lock the building and close up the seed house at night, and Hodges testified, over objection, he supposed it was done on this occasion. The testimony was conclusive that the seed stolen were of less value than $20.”
We think, as contended by defendant’s counsel, that the jury must have understood from this instruction that entering in any unusual way, as in the present case, entering through a hole in the wall, even if left unclosed, would be a breaking. This was an incorrect statement of the law. It is true that entering by a chimney, although without any active breaking, is a constructive breaking. 1 Hale’s P. C. 552; 1 Hawkins’ P. C. 58, sec. 4; State v. Boone, 35 N. C. 244, 57 Am. Dec. 555; Olds v. State, 97 Ala. 81, 12 So. 400. This exception to' the general rule is placed on the somewhat technical ground that a chimney is as much closed as the nature of things permit. We have been able to find no case, however, except the Texas cases resting on a statute of that State, which hold's that it is a breaking to enter a house without removing or overcoming any obstruction or obstacle of any kind, in an unusual way or at an unusual place. The exception on this point must be sustained.
The judgment of this Court is that the judgment of the Circuit Court be reversed, and the case remanded for a new trial.
Reversed.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- State v. Hart.
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- Syllabus
- 1. Housebreaking — Labcexy—Chimney'.—Entering a house, for the purpose of stealing, through an opening in the wall left open is not a breaking. The exception to this rule that an entrance through a chimney is a breaking, is because the chimney is as much closed as the nature of the case permits. 2. Ibid. — Evidence.—That it was the habit of one in charge of a building to close it up at night is competent, but that he thought he had done so on a particular night is incompetent.